Ginés de Lillo

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File:Gines de Lillo.jpg
A Spanish visitor

Ginés de Lillo (1566, Murcia - 24 January 1630, Arauco), a high-ranking officer in the Spanish army, was in 1603 nominated official visitor to the lands between the towns of Los Cauquenes and Choapa, part of modern day Chile.[1]

Visitor to Chile

The post was created in 1602 by Governor Alonso de Ribera with the objective of visiting and measuring[2] lands in the hands of Spanish and indigenous people so as to understand the extent of Spanish power in Chile and to classify the extensive and disparate indigenous groups. In this way the Mapuche people could be put to work in the encomienda pseudo-feudal system.[3]

The renunciation of his predecessors

Alonso de Ribera initially named Juan Morales de Negrete official visitor, but he turned the post down; the Governor's second choice was Melchor Jufré del Aguila, but he too was not interested. Thus the title went to Ginés de Lillo.

Named official visitor

On 21 August 1603 Ginés de Lillo began his work[4] in the regions of Ñuñoa, Apoquindo, Manquehue, Vitacura, Tobalaba and Peñalolén. He then proceeded into the foothills of the Andes as far as Maipo before assaying both sides of the road from Colina and Aconcagua, Lo Negrete, Renca and Huechuraba. In 1604 he steered in the direction of Tango, on the northern bank of the Maipo River,[5] Chiñigue, Pomaire, Melipilla, the Puangue valley, Curacaví, Mallarauco and Ibacache, ending in Pudahuel where he stayed as a guest of the Society of Jesus.[6] He then measured the farms of Quilicura owned by Don Bartolomé Blumenthal.[7] The same year he surveyed the sides of the Acuyo (Casablanca) valley from Cuesta de Zapata or Cordillera del Alamo to the sea, ending at Viña del Mar in either the Peuco or the Penco valley.[8]

In 1605 he visited Ocoa and Quillota.

As well as being of use to the Governor, the document de Lillo produced is now a source of historical information on indigenous seats of power in central Chile, their authority and toponymy, as well as the encomienda system and forced movement of these people.

The case of Bárbola de Oropesa

Bárbola de Oropesa,[9] widow of Don Juan, Cacique of Macul, testified that she was 'aggrieved' at the measurement and redistribution of lands visited by Ginés de Lillo in 1603.[10] She was assigned less land than appeared to be lawfully, heritably hers. According to her testimony, she was a soft target and thus chosen to be the loser in an effort to right earlier injustices in land allocation.

References

  1. General History of Chile, Book 4 (Miguel de Cervantes Virtual Library)
  2. The rights of indigenous people in Chile, p376 (Institute of Indigenous Studies, University of the Frontier)
  3. Chilean Memory: Documents
  4. The general visit of the land by Ginés de Lillo (Fernando Silva Vargas)
  5. Chilean Memory: Presentation
  6. Chilean Memory – the Society of Jesus in Chile: Presentation
  7. Universum (Talca): The vineyards of Quilicura in the Kingdom of Chile, 1545-1744
  8. Quilpué: the Chilean city of the sun
  9. Raïssa Kordic: Six Chilean testimonies from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (Critical preliminary edition, History notes #18, December 1998, pp272-276).
  10. José María Ots de Capdequí: Historical outline of the rights of women in Indian legislation (Madrid, Editorial Reus S.A., 1920, p130).